You are on page 1of 5

1/11/14 Command-C: A Local Clipboard Sharing Tool for OS X and iOS 7 - MacStories

www.macstories.net/reviews/command-c-a-local-clipboard-sharing-tool-for-os-x-and-ios-7/ 1/5
This week's sponsor
Backblaze: Online Backup for your computer.
Backblaze is $5/month, Mac native, unlimited,
unthrottled, and uncomplicated.
advertisehere
Hosted by
Even if my workflow these days primarily consists of reading and writing on the iPad, there are still
times when I need to share content either text or pictures across my iOS devices, from my iPad to
my Mac, or from OS X to iOS. While I can normally achieve inter-device communication using
something like Evernote to keep my notes in sync everywhere, it's not an ideal solution: why having to
save and sync a temporary bit of text that simply needs to be acted upon once? Command-C, created
by Italian developer Danilo Torrisi, is a clipboard sharing tool that I've been testing for the past couple
of months and that has allowed me to eschew syncing services when I just want to quickly copy &
paste between my Mac and iOS devices.
Clipboard Sharing
If the idea sounds familiar, that's normal. Back in 2009, Tapbots released Pastebot, a utility for OS X
and iPhone OS (there was no iPad then) that allowed you to share contents of the clipboard and
generic bits of data locally between a Mac and an iPhone. Pastebot was great for its time, but its
functionality was deeply hindered by the limitations of Apple's old iPhone software, which put strict
limits on how apps could work in the background. Tapbots tried to work around those limitations, but,
About Sponsorships
Stories Reviews Linked Type here to search
Got a tip? Developing a new app? Tell us.
Contact us!
Today's best Deals
Reviews
Command-C: A Local Clipboard Sharing
Tool for OS X and iOS 7
Capturing The Now with Kennedy
WriteRight: A Text Editor with English
Synonyms and Antonyms
Quick iTunes Affiliate Link Creation with
Affiliate for Mac
deGeo: A Simple, Useful Geotag Remover
for iOS
Photos+: A Photo Browser with Metadata
Support for iPhone
Stories
Leaving Google Chrome: Why Ive
Returned To Safari
Retina iPad mini: First Impressions
Apples Remote and iOS 7 Design
A Brief Review of the Nintendo 2DS
iPad mini For Content Creation
Better Camera Roll Integration in iPhoto
for iOS 7
Command-C: A
Local Clipboard
Sharing Tool for
OS X and iOS 7
WriteRight: A Text
Editor with English
Synonyms and
Antonyms
Quick iTunes
Affiliate Link
Creation with
Affiliate for Mac
My Photo
Management
Workflow, Early
2014
Command-C: A Local Clipboard Sharing Tool
for OS X and iOS 7
Posted by Federico Viticci at 11:26pm EST
Jan
9
2014
REVIEW REVIEW REVIEW STORIES
1/11/14 Command-C: A Local Clipboard Sharing Tool for OS X and iOS 7 - MacStories
www.macstories.net/reviews/command-c-a-local-clipboard-sharing-tool-for-os-x-and-ios-7/ 2/5
ultimately, it wasn't worth it. After the launch of iCloud in 2011, other developers picked up on the
idea of creating a clipboard sharing tool for iOS and OS X based on automatic cloud sync, relying on
iCloud to constantly share whatever you had copied on one device to the other. My problem with those
apps was threefold: iCloud wasn't reliable; I didn't want to always send my clipboard to iCloud; and,
iOS apps still couldn't always run in the background.
Command-C brings back the old concept of local clipboard sharing, with some unique twists. Thanks
to iOS 7, Command-C on an iPhone or iPad (the app is Universal) can always be available as a
receiver in the background, using notifications to alert you when the clipboard has been received from
another device. Communication between devices (which includes a dedicated menubar app for the
Mac) happens on a local WiFi network, it's encrypted, and no data is sent over the Internet; though
the app works with a one tap approach to send your current clipboard to another device, there are
some fantastic tools for power users who want to do more with keyboard shortcuts, URL schemes,
and bookmarklets. Command-C is a clipboard sharing tool for the modern age, built with iOS 7 (and a
new set of limitations that the current OS entails) and multiple iOS devices in mind.
Command-C is available for iOS and OS X, but using the Mac app isn't necessary if all you want to do
is sharing the clipboard from an iPhone to an iPad and vice versa. The setup process is fairly
straightforward, with the app asking you to have both devices on the same local network and
displaying a confirmation dialog to add a device and let instances of Command-C see each other. If
you also want to add a Mac to the mix, you'll need to deal with the menubar app and confirm iOS
devices from there. Once added, devices will be listed with their respective icons and names in the
main screen, and you'll be good to go.
To share the current contents of your clipboard, tap a device (on iOS) or double-click it (OS X).
1
The
clipboard will be sent, showing a notification and playing a sound (both optional settings) on the other
device; on the receiver's end, the clipboard will be set automatically to the new one. Command-C
makes for an impressive demo: copy something on your iPad, send it, paste it on the iPhone with the
standard Copy & Paste menu.
What's nice about Command-C is that it's not limited to plain text. Either on iOS or OS X, you can copy
rich/formatted text and even images and share them to another device to paste right away. You can
copy an image on iOS, send it to your Mac, and paste it in the Finder or any other app; you can select
rich text (including formatting with hyperlinks) on a Mac, and paste it on the iPad.
2
In my tests,
Command-C always preserved formatting/images and allowed me to paste content into apps like
Apple Mail, Evernote, the Finder I was also able to copy an image from my Mac to my iPhone, send it
from my iPhone to my iPad, and paste it in Mail as an inline attachment. While AirDrop has somewhat
obviated the need for an image sharing tool for iOS devices, I found the possibility to send images to
the Mac fast and convenient; unfortunately, you can't send multiple copied images at once, as the
clipboard will force the receiver device to only see one at a time.
1/11/14 Command-C: A Local Clipboard Sharing Tool for OS X and iOS 7 - MacStories
www.macstories.net/reviews/command-c-a-local-clipboard-sharing-tool-for-os-x-and-ios-7/ 3/5
URLs are also well implemented in Command-C. When you send a URL to an iOS device, Command-
C can automatically open the URL in Safari: if Command-C is in the foreground, the URL will open
automatically, otherwise you'll have to tap on a notification first. Command-C for Mac comes with less
limitations here, as the app can always run in the background in the menubar and you don't have to
click notification banners to launch your default browser.
Power Users
Danilo Torrisi built some powerful advanced features into the first release of Command-C. As he
copiously detailed in the app's FAQ, Command-C has a URL scheme to send your clipboard, send
specific text, or send a URL directly to another device with just one tap. You can find the URL scheme
documentation here, and Torrisi also created a handy interactive bookmarklet generation webpage to
assemble browser boomarklets based on action and device names.
To understand the URL scheme, here's an example:
1/11/14 Command-C: A Local Clipboard Sharing Tool for OS X and iOS 7 - MacStories
www.macstories.net/reviews/command-c-a-local-clipboard-sharing-tool-for-os-x-and-ios-7/ 4/5
command-c://x-callback-url/copy?deviceName=iPhone
The app has three actions: copy , to send the current clipboard; copyText , to send specific text to
copy on another device; copyAndOpenURL , to copy a URL and force it to open in the default browser.
The deviceName parameter indicates the name of the device as picked by Command-C. It needs to
be encoded, and you need to pay attention to apostrophes or other special characters in the name. If
you don't want to use the name parameter because encoding is boring (and an overall awful
procedure), you can use deviceIndex instead. With the index, 0 will be the first device in the list, 1
the second one, and so forth. However, there is a simpler way to do this, which I'll explain in a tip
below.
Keeping in mind that content and names always need to be encoded for the URL scheme, here's my
set of Command-C actions to automate the process of sharing the clipboard to other devices.
3
Bookmarklets to copy the current browser page to my iPhone/iPad and return to Safari automatically:
An Editorial workflow to copy the currently selected text to one of your Command-C devices and return
to Editorial (download here).
A Launch Center Pro action to send the clipboard to another device (download here):
And another one to send text manually to another device with a keyboard prompt (download here):
And a Launch Center Pro workflow to upload a photo to Dropbox, get its URL back, and copy it to a
device called iPad, which will open the photo's URL in Safari (download here). Note the encoding
trick in the second part of the URL.
Note: these URLs were shared across devices using Command-C.
Three tips worth keeping in mind when automating Command-C or chaining it to other apps:
Reset your device's name to something simpler like iPhone in Settings > General > About >
Name; if you had already added a device to Command-C before changing its name, remove
the device, force-quit the app, reboot your device, and Command-C will pick up the new
device name;
If you don't want to use Safari to exchange URLs, remember: Google Chrome has a URL
scheme that you can use to open URLs directly in Chrome, skipping Safari;
You can use Command-C to launch URL schemes on other devices: leave Command-C open
on the receiver device, send it a URL scheme that links to Command-C itself, and watch what
happens.
For a 1.0 release, the power-user automation features that Torrisi implemented are well-considered
and useful. For a future update, I think the app should provide an easier way to handle device names
without encoding them (and thus running into issues with apostrophes or other characters).
Wrap Up
Command-C makes intelligent use of iOS 7's new background notification system to improve on the
old concept of a local clipboard sharing tool. Thanks to iOS 7, Command-C can always listen for
clipboards shared by other devices and preview what's been pasted with notification banners. At this
point, Command-C is hitting another major roadblock in iOS, which is being able to send data to other
apps without opening the main Command-C app. Perhaps one day it'll be possible to copy something
on your iPhone and send it to your iPad without launching Command-C first; today, you'll still have to at
javascript:window.location='command-c://x-callback-url/copyText?text='+encodeURIComponent(window.location)+'&x-success='+encodeURIComponent(window.location)+'&x-failure='+encodeURIComponent(window.location)+'&deviceName=iPad';
javascript:window.location='command-c://x-callback-url/copyText?text='+encodeURIComponent(window.location)+'&x-success='+encodeURIComponent(window.location)+'&x-failure='+encodeURIComponent(window.location)+'&deviceName=iPhone';
command-c://x-callback-url/copy?deviceName=iPad&x-source=Launch%20Pro&x-success={{launchpro://}}
command-c://x-callback-url/copyText?deviceName=iPad&x-source=Launch%20Pro&x-success={{launchpro://}}&text=[prompt:Paste To iPad]
launch://dropbox/addphoto?attach=photo:cameraroll&path={{/Photos/LCP}}&getlink=1&x-success=command-c%3A%2F%2Fx-callback-url%2Fcopy%3FdeviceName%3DiPad
1/11/14 Command-C: A Local Clipboard Sharing Tool for OS X and iOS 7 - MacStories
www.macstories.net/reviews/command-c-a-local-clipboard-sharing-tool-for-os-x-and-ios-7/ 5/5
Copyright 2014 MacStories
MacStories v3.7.6
Tags: appstore, iOS 7
least open the app to send your clipboard.
Command-C isn't powered by a cloud service: you'll have to use multiple devices on the same local
network to take advantage of it. The decision comes with pros and cons: your clipboard is never sent
to any cloud service, but you need to be on the same WiFi for the app to work.
Torrisi needs to decrease the error rate of the app. In my tests, Command-C has worked as advertised
about 80% of the time; occasionally, I had to manually open the iOS app because it got stuck. My
understanding is that bugs in iOS 7 may be the culprit, so here's to hoping that iOS 7.1 will improve the
general performance of the app.
I like Command-C. I'm using it every day to share my clipboard across my three devices when I'm at
home
4
and I'm a fan of the power-user features available through URL schemes and browser
integration. I see Command-C as a modern, simpler Pastebot: built for iOS 7, available on the iPad,
and always running in the background. Command-C for iOS is Universal and $3.99 on the App Store;
Command-C for Mac is free on the Mac App Store.
1. On the Mac, you can also show the menubar app with a hotkey and choose a device from the
list with the keyboard, hitting Enter to send.
2. When pasting an image to OS X, the file is converted to .TIFF. Torrisi told me that this is the
format the OS X clipboard prefers, but I'd like to see a setting to preserve the original
JPEG/PNG format of image files.
3. To make these work, change the included device names to match the ones for your
devices.
4. The app should also work through Personal Hotspot if you're sharing a connection on the
go.
You should follow the author on Twitter here.
Code by Alessandro Vendruscolo Logo and icons by Silvia Gatta @ Pixelcave All rights reserved

You might also like